Construction Maintenance and Allied Workers explained

Construction, Maintenance and Allied Workers Canada
Abbreviation:CMAW
Founders:-->
Defunct:-->
Type:Trade union
Headquarters:Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
Field:-->
Membership:4,000
Leader Title:President
Leader Name:Chris Wasilenchuk
Leader Title2:Secretary-treasurer
Leader Name2:Paul Nedelec Jr.
Affiliations:Confederation of Canadian Unions
Former Name:-->

The Construction, Maintenance and Allied Workers Canada (CMAW) is a construction trade union headquartered in Vancouver. The purpose of the CMAW is to negotiate pay and work conditions on behalf of its 4,000 members in British Columbia and Alberta. It is affiliated with the independent Confederation of Canadian Unions.

History

The Construction Maintenance and Allied Workers Canada (CMAW) was officially formed in 2007 following an 11-year struggle with their American-based international parent union, the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (UBCJA).

CMAW-organized employers have constructed projects in Western Canada such as the Waneta Dam, the John Hart Dam, Site C dam, Alcan Aluminium Smelter, CNRL Horizon major projects, Mosaic Potash and the National Ship Building Procurement.

The union is a member of the Confederation of Canadian Unions as of September 2013.[1]

Organization

CMAW comprises nine locals in BC and Alberta and is governed by a 12-person executive board of directly elected representatives. The officers are elected by delegates at CMAW's biennial convention. CMAW's president and secretary-treasurer are full-time CMAW employees.

Its official publication is The Write Angle, a member publication mailed quarterly.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.ccu-csc.ca/construction-maintenance-allied-workers-join-ccu/ "CMAW joins CCU" CMAW press release